Research projects and studies on the topic of international migration tend to focus on big cities as the hub of global flows of migration. In contrast, the rural areas are only assigned the role of being the source of all these flows. In particular, peripheral rural regions are given the connotation of concentrating major problems such as overaging, emigration and an economical or infrastructural thinning out that have the effect of factors pushing out anybody who is toying with the idea of migrating. This article will use the East Saxon and Saar regions of Germany as
examples for studying the opposite tendencies – namely international immigration into shrinking rural areas. This article analyses what potential international immigration could have for the development and competitiveness of rural regions in an era of globalisation. This article will use qualitative interviews to investigate the following issues: What opportunities does migration into rural areas offer these areas themselves as well as the persons immigrating? What is the relationship to the local population composed of those who stayed? It becomes apparent that neoclassical approaches for explaining international migration cannot be simply transferred to shrinking rural regions because the local labour markets are neither characterised by a lack of labour nor economic dynamics. Furthermore, more recent approaches that emphasise ethnic communities, family ties and social networks are also hardly suited for explaining international migration into the rural area. The reason for this is the fact that the number of international immigrants here is too low to be able to apply these explanatory models. It is closer to the mark to identify the rural area as a niche for certain types of international migrants who want to take advantage of specific rural characteristics for themselves. This is where rural spaces could gain in importance in the range of issues having to do with international migration.